US20040057892A1 - Sodium bicarbonate production method - Google Patents
Sodium bicarbonate production method Download PDFInfo
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- US20040057892A1 US20040057892A1 US10/674,227 US67422703A US2004057892A1 US 20040057892 A1 US20040057892 A1 US 20040057892A1 US 67422703 A US67422703 A US 67422703A US 2004057892 A1 US2004057892 A1 US 2004057892A1
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- UIIMBOGNXHQVGW-UHFFFAOYSA-M Sodium bicarbonate Chemical compound [Na+].OC([O-])=O UIIMBOGNXHQVGW-UHFFFAOYSA-M 0.000 title claims abstract description 108
- 229910000030 sodium bicarbonate Inorganic materials 0.000 title claims abstract description 54
- 235000017557 sodium bicarbonate Nutrition 0.000 title claims abstract description 54
- 238000004519 manufacturing process Methods 0.000 title claims description 40
- CDBYLPFSWZWCQE-UHFFFAOYSA-L Sodium Carbonate Chemical compound [Na+].[Na+].[O-]C([O-])=O CDBYLPFSWZWCQE-UHFFFAOYSA-L 0.000 claims abstract description 187
- 229910000029 sodium carbonate Inorganic materials 0.000 claims abstract description 74
- 238000000034 method Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 58
- 239000002351 wastewater Substances 0.000 claims abstract description 56
- 230000008569 process Effects 0.000 claims abstract description 49
- 241001625808 Trona Species 0.000 claims abstract description 35
- 238000006243 chemical reaction Methods 0.000 claims abstract description 15
- 229940001593 sodium carbonate Drugs 0.000 claims description 59
- XYQRXRFVKUPBQN-UHFFFAOYSA-L Sodium carbonate decahydrate Chemical compound O.O.O.O.O.O.O.O.O.O.[Na+].[Na+].[O-]C([O-])=O XYQRXRFVKUPBQN-UHFFFAOYSA-L 0.000 claims description 20
- 229940018038 sodium carbonate decahydrate Drugs 0.000 claims description 20
- 238000010926 purge Methods 0.000 claims description 18
- 238000005065 mining Methods 0.000 claims description 11
- 150000004682 monohydrates Chemical class 0.000 claims description 9
- MQRJBSHKWOFOGF-UHFFFAOYSA-L disodium;carbonate;hydrate Chemical compound O.[Na+].[Na+].[O-]C([O-])=O MQRJBSHKWOFOGF-UHFFFAOYSA-L 0.000 claims 3
- 238000000605 extraction Methods 0.000 claims 1
- 230000009467 reduction Effects 0.000 abstract description 6
- 235000017550 sodium carbonate Nutrition 0.000 description 60
- 239000000047 product Substances 0.000 description 22
- 241000196324 Embryophyta Species 0.000 description 19
- 239000000243 solution Substances 0.000 description 14
- XLYOFNOQVPJJNP-UHFFFAOYSA-N water Substances O XLYOFNOQVPJJNP-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 12
- 239000013078 crystal Substances 0.000 description 11
- DGAQECJNVWCQMB-PUAWFVPOSA-M Ilexoside XXIX Chemical compound C[C@@H]1CC[C@@]2(CC[C@@]3(C(=CC[C@H]4[C@]3(CC[C@@H]5[C@@]4(CC[C@@H](C5(C)C)OS(=O)(=O)[O-])C)C)[C@@H]2[C@]1(C)O)C)C(=O)O[C@H]6[C@@H]([C@H]([C@@H]([C@H](O6)CO)O)O)O.[Na+] DGAQECJNVWCQMB-PUAWFVPOSA-M 0.000 description 10
- 150000004691 decahydrates Chemical class 0.000 description 10
- 239000011734 sodium Substances 0.000 description 10
- 229910052708 sodium Inorganic materials 0.000 description 10
- 241000272875 Ardeidae Species 0.000 description 6
- 239000000356 contaminant Substances 0.000 description 4
- 239000012452 mother liquor Substances 0.000 description 4
- 229940071207 sesquicarbonate Drugs 0.000 description 4
- 239000012267 brine Substances 0.000 description 3
- 238000001354 calcination Methods 0.000 description 3
- 238000005516 engineering process Methods 0.000 description 3
- 238000001704 evaporation Methods 0.000 description 3
- 238000004064 recycling Methods 0.000 description 3
- HPALAKNZSZLMCH-UHFFFAOYSA-M sodium;chloride;hydrate Chemical compound O.[Na+].[Cl-] HPALAKNZSZLMCH-UHFFFAOYSA-M 0.000 description 3
- BVKZGUZCCUSVTD-UHFFFAOYSA-M Bicarbonate Chemical compound OC([O-])=O BVKZGUZCCUSVTD-UHFFFAOYSA-M 0.000 description 2
- CURLTUGMZLYLDI-UHFFFAOYSA-N Carbon dioxide Chemical compound O=C=O CURLTUGMZLYLDI-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 2
- BVKZGUZCCUSVTD-UHFFFAOYSA-L Carbonate Chemical compound [O-]C([O-])=O BVKZGUZCCUSVTD-UHFFFAOYSA-L 0.000 description 2
- UIIMBOGNXHQVGW-DEQYMQKBSA-M Sodium bicarbonate-14C Chemical compound [Na+].O[14C]([O-])=O UIIMBOGNXHQVGW-DEQYMQKBSA-M 0.000 description 2
- 238000010960 commercial process Methods 0.000 description 2
- 238000010586 diagram Methods 0.000 description 2
- 230000008020 evaporation Effects 0.000 description 2
- 238000001914 filtration Methods 0.000 description 2
- 239000012535 impurity Substances 0.000 description 2
- 238000011084 recovery Methods 0.000 description 2
- 229910000031 sodium sesquicarbonate Inorganic materials 0.000 description 2
- 235000018341 sodium sesquicarbonate Nutrition 0.000 description 2
- NASFKTWZWDYFER-UHFFFAOYSA-N sodium;hydrate Chemical compound O.[Na] NASFKTWZWDYFER-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 2
- 239000007787 solid Substances 0.000 description 2
- WCTAGTRAWPDFQO-UHFFFAOYSA-K trisodium;hydrogen carbonate;carbonate Chemical compound [Na+].[Na+].[Na+].OC([O-])=O.[O-]C([O-])=O WCTAGTRAWPDFQO-UHFFFAOYSA-K 0.000 description 2
- 241000006351 Leucophyllum frutescens Species 0.000 description 1
- BIVQBWSIGJFXLF-UHFFFAOYSA-N PPM-18 Chemical compound C=1C(=O)C2=CC=CC=C2C(=O)C=1NC(=O)C1=CC=CC=C1 BIVQBWSIGJFXLF-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 230000009471 action Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000004458 analytical method Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000008901 benefit Effects 0.000 description 1
- FFBHFFJDDLITSX-UHFFFAOYSA-N benzyl N-[2-hydroxy-4-(3-oxomorpholin-4-yl)phenyl]carbamate Chemical compound OC1=C(NC(=O)OCC2=CC=CC=C2)C=CC(=C1)N1CCOCC1=O FFBHFFJDDLITSX-UHFFFAOYSA-N 0.000 description 1
- 239000001569 carbon dioxide Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229910002092 carbon dioxide Inorganic materials 0.000 description 1
- 239000007795 chemical reaction product Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000004140 cleaning Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000011109 contamination Methods 0.000 description 1
- 230000001351 cycling effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000007872 degassing Methods 0.000 description 1
- 238000004821 distillation Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000000706 filtrate Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000006872 improvement Effects 0.000 description 1
- 239000007788 liquid Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000000463 material Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000003647 oxidation Effects 0.000 description 1
- 238000007254 oxidation reaction Methods 0.000 description 1
- 239000000825 pharmaceutical preparation Substances 0.000 description 1
- 229940127557 pharmaceutical product Drugs 0.000 description 1
- 239000002994 raw material Substances 0.000 description 1
- 230000001105 regulatory effect Effects 0.000 description 1
- 102000037983 regulatory factors Human genes 0.000 description 1
- 108091008025 regulatory factors Proteins 0.000 description 1
- 239000002904 solvent Substances 0.000 description 1
- 239000000126 substance Substances 0.000 description 1
- 210000003462 vein Anatomy 0.000 description 1
- 239000002699 waste material Substances 0.000 description 1
- 238000004065 wastewater treatment Methods 0.000 description 1
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Classifications
-
- C—CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
- C01—INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- C01D—COMPOUNDS OF ALKALI METALS, i.e. LITHIUM, SODIUM, POTASSIUM, RUBIDIUM, CAESIUM, OR FRANCIUM
- C01D7/00—Carbonates of sodium, potassium or alkali metals in general
- C01D7/10—Preparation of bicarbonates from carbonates
Definitions
- the invention relates to processes for the production of sodium bicarbonate, sodium carbonate, and sodium carbonate decahydrate, all as may be derived from trona. It also relates to obtaining additional desired product from a given weight of ore. It further relates to reduction of waste water from commercial production facilities.
- the commercial production of sodium bicarbonate generally begins with the mining of trona ore, which is processed in “soda” plants to produce sodium carbonate.
- the desired product of that production is a high quality and fairly pure sodium carbonate product.
- the pure sodium carbonate product is then converted to sodium bicarbonate in a separate plant.
- the conversion of the carbonate to bicarbonate is typically done in a “no waste-water effluent” manner.
- the actual mining of trona ore may be accomplished by either dry mining or solution mining. Following dry mining, the trona ore is conventionally processed according to either the sesquicarbonate process or the monocarbonate process.
- the sesquicarbonate process involves a series of steps, including: dissolving crude mined trona in a cycling, hot mother liquor containing excess normal sodium carbonate over sodium bicarbonate in order to dissolve the trona congruently, clarifying the insoluble muds from the solution, filtering the solution, passing the filtrate to a series of vacuum crystallizers where water is evaporated and the solution is cooled causing sodium sesquicarbonate to crystallize out of the solution in a stable crystal phase, recycling the mother liquor to dissolve more crude trona and calcining the sesquicarbonate crystals at a temperature sufficient to convert same to sodium carbonate, or soda ash.
- a more direct and simplified method developed subsequently to the sesquicarbonate process is the monohydrate process.
- the monohydrate process tends to yield a dense, organic-free sodium carbonate product through a series of steps which include: calcining the crude trona ore at a temperature of about 125 degrees C. to about 500 C.
- the dense soda ash product produced by the monohydrate process has become has become the standard product of the trona based sodium carbonate/soda ash industry.
- solution mining involves dissolving trona ore into a solution and recovering sodium products from the solution.
- a trona ore deposit, or other sodium-containing ore is contacted with a solvent, such as water.
- a solvent such as water.
- the water dissolves the trona ore creating a brine.
- the brine is recovered and processed to recover sodium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, sodium sesquicarbonate, sodium monohydrate, or other sodium products.
- the sodium depleted brine is typically recycled to the trona ore deposit to dissolve additional trona.
- waste-water effluent stream of a sodium carbonate manufacturing facility (hereinafter stream A) as a feed for sodium carbonate decahydrate production.
- the sodium carbonate decahydrate product (crystal, typically containing 63% water and 37% sodium carbonate) is then used as the feed for a sodium bicarbonate production process. While there is an ultimate effluent from the sodium carbonate decahydrate production (waste-water stream C) and from the sodium bicarbonate production (waste-water stream B) steps, the total amount of stream B plus stream C is less than the stream A utilized for the sodium carbonate decahydrate production feed.
- FIG. 1 is a block diagram of the prior art process of making sodium bicarbonate from trona ore through an anhydrous sodium carbonate (soda ash) intermediate.
- FIG. 2 is a block diagram of the present invention which utilizes the waste stream from the production of soda ash to produce additional sodium bicarbonate and/or sodium carbonate through a sodium carbonate decahydrate intermediate.
- the present invention is the achievement of a number of goals, all of which may be achieved separately or simultaneously.
- the invention is the use of a waste-water effluent stream (A) from a monohydrate production process as a feed for a process which converts sodium carbonate ultimately into sodium bicarbonate.
- This waste-water stream (A) which the present invention utilizes for its raw material input typically contains significant amounts of unrecovered sodium value generally from about 2% to about 5% of the total amount of sodium carbonate contained in the mined trona, and typically the waste water stream A itself will contain about 20 to 30 weight % sodium carbonate.
- the otherwise recovered sodium carbonate can be used as sodium carbonate for the usual purposes, but it is applicant's novel process for the utilization of the sodium carbonate contained in waste water stream which is the subject of this invention.
- the sodium carbonate manufacturing facility from which waste-water stream A leads will generally be a monohydrate facility such as is described in the BACKGROUND above. Because of regulatory factors to keep waste-water effluent streams as low as possible, the usual conversion of purified sodium carbonate to sodium bicarbonate has been practiced by methods that have a zero waste-water effluent stream.
- the effluent stream (A) contains a large number of contaminants that would be expected to carry over in some part into the sodium bicarbonate product.
- the product resulting from the inventive process using the stream (A) as a feed for a sodium carbonate to sodium bicarbonate conversion process is at least as pure, and generally purer than the sodium bicarbonate produced by the current non-effluent waste-water sodium carbonate to sodium bicarbonate production process.
- any conversion of trona ore to sodium carbonate process can be used as long as it produces a waste-water effluent stream which has unrecovered sodium carbonate dissolved therein.
- the typical trona ore to sodium carbonate processes are known in the art as seen from: “Sodium Carbonate,” Kirk Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, 4 th Ed., Vol. 1, 1991.
- the effluent waste-water stream (A) resulting from the conversion of trona ore to sodium carbonate (which contains additional sodium carbonate dissolved therein) is used as a liquid feed into a process for the conversion of a portion of the sodium carbonate dissolved therein into sodium carbonate decahydrate.
- This “decahydrate process” produces crystals of sodium carbonate decahydrate, which are then fed directly to the sodium bicarbonate plant.
- the sodium carbonate decahydrate process also has some waster-water liquor, typically referred to as bitterns, but the sum of these bitterns and the waste-water from the sodium bicarbonate process (further downstream) will be less than the original stream A consumed.
- FIG. 2 The process of the invention is illustrated in FIG. 2, where the entire process 1 is composed of three substeps, linked together as shown.
- Trona ore is fed into sodium carbonate process 2 which produces sodium carbonate crystal product 3 and effluent waste-water stream A.
- Stream A is fed into sodium carbonate to sodium carbonate decahydrate conversion plant 4 which produces sodium carbonate decahydrate crystals 5 and waste-water stream C.
- Sodium carbonate decahydrate crystals 5 are fed into sodium carbonate decahydrate to sodium bicarbonate conversion plant 6 , with the production of sodium bicarbonate 7 and waste-water stream B.
- Both streams B and C contain additional still unrecovered sodium value and may be utilized as had been stream A in the past or either or both may be recycled into sodium carbonate to sodium carbonate decahydrate conversion plant 4 (with or without removal of solids as desired and with or without degassing of carbon dioxide, as may be desired).
- decahydrate plant receives the purge from the existing mono process soda ash plant as feed.
- the decahydrate process is essentially nothing more than a crystallizer, recovering much of the dissolved sodium carbonate as the solid decahydrate of sodium carbonate and yielding its own purge, called bitterns.
- the decahydrate crystals are fed to the existing sodium bicarbonate plant instead of the refined soda ash formerly fed thereto.
- the sodium bicarbonate plant runs more or less normally, except the added water fed (note that decahydrate is 63% water and 37% sodium carbonate) necessitates a waste-water purge stream from the sodium bicarbonate plant.
- this purging of a sodium bicarbonate plant is unappealing, but in fact the net purging required with this new technology is less than that required in the prior art, as follows:
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- Inorganic Chemistry (AREA)
- Compounds Of Alkaline-Earth Elements, Aluminum Or Rare-Earth Metals (AREA)
Abstract
Description
- This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 09/910,540, filed Jul. 20, 2001, and the benefit of which is here claimed.
- Not Applicable
- The invention relates to processes for the production of sodium bicarbonate, sodium carbonate, and sodium carbonate decahydrate, all as may be derived from trona. It also relates to obtaining additional desired product from a given weight of ore. It further relates to reduction of waste water from commercial production facilities.
- The commercial production of sodium bicarbonate generally begins with the mining of trona ore, which is processed in “soda” plants to produce sodium carbonate. The desired product of that production is a high quality and fairly pure sodium carbonate product. In normal sodium bicarbonate production the pure sodium carbonate product is then converted to sodium bicarbonate in a separate plant. The conversion of the carbonate to bicarbonate is typically done in a “no waste-water effluent” manner.
- The actual mining of trona ore may be accomplished by either dry mining or solution mining. Following dry mining, the trona ore is conventionally processed according to either the sesquicarbonate process or the monocarbonate process. The sesquicarbonate process involves a series of steps, including: dissolving crude mined trona in a cycling, hot mother liquor containing excess normal sodium carbonate over sodium bicarbonate in order to dissolve the trona congruently, clarifying the insoluble muds from the solution, filtering the solution, passing the filtrate to a series of vacuum crystallizers where water is evaporated and the solution is cooled causing sodium sesquicarbonate to crystallize out of the solution in a stable crystal phase, recycling the mother liquor to dissolve more crude trona and calcining the sesquicarbonate crystals at a temperature sufficient to convert same to sodium carbonate, or soda ash.
- A more direct and simplified method developed subsequently to the sesquicarbonate process is the monohydrate process. The monohydrate process tends to yield a dense, organic-free sodium carbonate product through a series of steps which include: calcining the crude trona ore at a temperature of about 125 degrees C. to about 500 C. to convert the trona ore to crude sodium carbonate and to reduce the amount of the organics by oxidation and distillation, dissolving the crude sodium carbonate in water, clarifying the resulting sodium carbonate solution to remove insoluables as muds therfrom, filtering the clarified solution, evaporating water from the clarified and filtered sodium carbonate solution in an evaporator circuit, crystallizing sodium monohydrate crystals from the pregnant mother liquor, calcining the monohydrate crystals to produce a dense, organic-free sodium carbonate product and recycling the mother liquor from the crystals to the evaporation step. The dense soda ash product produced by the monohydrate process has become has become the standard product of the trona based sodium carbonate/soda ash industry.
- Still another trona processing technology involves solution mining. Solution mining has become of more interest as costs associated with dry mining have increased. Futhermore, solution mining offers a process by which the large quantities of ore remaining as pillars, walls, and ceilings in previously dry mined areas may be recovered. In its simplest form, solution mining involves dissolving trona ore into a solution and recovering sodium products from the solution. For example, a trona ore deposit, or other sodium-containing ore, is contacted with a solvent, such as water. The water dissolves the trona ore creating a brine. The brine is recovered and processed to recover sodium carbonate, sodium bicarbonate, sodium sesquicarbonate, sodium monohydrate, or other sodium products. The sodium depleted brine is typically recycled to the trona ore deposit to dissolve additional trona.
- Over the years, commercial waste-water production has been severely curtailed by governmental action. First, water use demand needs to be kept low in commercial processes (where possible) so as to allow for adequate supplies for personal use and for commercial use that cannot be further reduced. Second, effluent water must be treated before being released into the environment so as to have as little an impact on the environment as possible. Unfortunately, waste-water treatment facilities are limited by both the volume of waste-water they can handle and the contaminants which might be in the waste-water. For these reasons, there has been severe governmental pressures to keep the volume of waste-water from commercial facilities to as low an amount as possible. In this vein, the amount of waste-water which can be discharged by a commercial plant is heavily regulated and subject to governmental permits.
- Therefore, processes that allow for a reduction of effluent waste-water over current commercial production processes are highly sought after.
- In addition, as non-renewable natural resources, such as mined ore, are used, there becomes an ever increasing need to extract more and more desired product from the production line using the same amount of starting ore. It would be highly desired to recover any significant amount of additional product without having to mine additional ore.
- To achieve both additional production of desired product and simultaneously reduce effluent waste-water is a truly prized situation that is desired in any commercial process. Achieving these typically requires a trade-off in reduced product purity; to achieve these with improved product purity would obviously be the best possible result.
- It is therefore an object of the invention to provide a process for the production of sodium bicarbonate (beginning with mined trona ore) that produces less effluent waste-water than current processes.
- It is also an object of the invention to provide a process for the production of sodium bicarbonate that allows for greater recovery of sodium as carbonate and/or bicarbonate per unit weight of trona ore than previously used processes.
- It is yet another object of the invention to obtain an end product which, despite utilizing a less pure feed than prior processes, is of the same or even greater purity than the product resulting from the prior processes.
- Other objects of the invention will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art.
- These and other objects of the invention can be achieved by utilizing the waste-water effluent stream of a sodium carbonate manufacturing facility (hereinafter stream A) as a feed for sodium carbonate decahydrate production. The sodium carbonate decahydrate product (crystal, typically containing 63% water and 37% sodium carbonate) is then used as the feed for a sodium bicarbonate production process. While there is an ultimate effluent from the sodium carbonate decahydrate production (waste-water stream C) and from the sodium bicarbonate production (waste-water stream B) steps, the total amount of stream B plus stream C is less than the stream A utilized for the sodium carbonate decahydrate production feed. Thus there is a net reduction in waste-water effluent, and an improvement in recovered sodium value, over the prior processes. A further surprising result is that the purity of the resulting sodium bicarbonate is as good as or even better than from the prior process, even though the sodium carbonate feeding the plant is not as pure as the soda ash used formerly.
- FIG. 1 is a block diagram of the prior art process of making sodium bicarbonate from trona ore through an anhydrous sodium carbonate (soda ash) intermediate.
- FIG. 2 is a block diagram of the present invention which utilizes the waste stream from the production of soda ash to produce additional sodium bicarbonate and/or sodium carbonate through a sodium carbonate decahydrate intermediate.
- The present invention is the achievement of a number of goals, all of which may be achieved separately or simultaneously. In essence, the invention is the use of a waste-water effluent stream (A) from a monohydrate production process as a feed for a process which converts sodium carbonate ultimately into sodium bicarbonate. This waste-water stream (A) which the present invention utilizes for its raw material input typically contains significant amounts of unrecovered sodium value generally from about 2% to about 5% of the total amount of sodium carbonate contained in the mined trona, and typically the waste water stream A itself will contain about 20 to 30 weight % sodium carbonate. The otherwise recovered sodium carbonate can be used as sodium carbonate for the usual purposes, but it is applicant's novel process for the utilization of the sodium carbonate contained in waste water stream which is the subject of this invention.
- The sodium carbonate manufacturing facility from which waste-water stream A leads will generally be a monohydrate facility such as is described in the BACKGROUND above. Because of regulatory factors to keep waste-water effluent streams as low as possible, the usual conversion of purified sodium carbonate to sodium bicarbonate has been practiced by methods that have a zero waste-water effluent stream. The use of the effluent stream (A), because it contains water, necessarily means that there will be a waste-water effluent stream in any process which utilizes it as a feed source. However, the total amount of waste-water effluent stream produced in the conversion of the sodium carbonate contained in the effluent stream (A) is surprisingly less than the amount of effluent stream (A) consumed as a feed source.
- In addition, the effluent stream (A) contains a large number of contaminants that would be expected to carry over in some part into the sodium bicarbonate product. A typical waste water stream from a monohydrate production facility utilizing trona ore as the source of sodium carbonate yields the analysis set forth in TABLE 1:
TABLE 1 Na2CO3% 30 COD ppm 2350 Cl−ppm 1200 SO4 = 2500 Ca++ppm 118 Mg++ppm 18 Soluble Si ppm 1500 Total Si ppm 2200 Al ppm 79 As ppm 2.5 B ppm 62 Ba ppm 16 Fe ppm 5 K ppm 1390 Mo ppm 11 P ppm 164 V ppm 5 - Since sodium bicarbonate is frequently used in food and pharmaceutical products and in very sensitive electronic component cleaning products, etc., high purity is an absolute necessity for commercially produced sodium bicarbonate. Therefore, introduction of any contaminants in excess of that present in current commercially produced materials is not suitable. Surprisingly, despite the presence of substantially greater contamination by a host of contaminants in the stream (A) not significantly present in the pure or substantially pure sodium carbonate used as the typical feed for a sodium carbonate to sodium bicarbonate conversion process, the product resulting from the inventive process using the stream (A) as a feed for a sodium carbonate to sodium bicarbonate conversion process is at least as pure, and generally purer than the sodium bicarbonate produced by the current non-effluent waste-water sodium carbonate to sodium bicarbonate production process.
- As the first step in the process, any conversion of trona ore to sodium carbonate process can be used as long as it produces a waste-water effluent stream which has unrecovered sodium carbonate dissolved therein. The typical trona ore to sodium carbonate processes are known in the art as seen from: “Sodium Carbonate,” Kirk Othmer Encyclopedia of Chemical Technology, 4 th Ed., Vol. 1, 1991.
- The effluent waste-water stream (A) resulting from the conversion of trona ore to sodium carbonate (which contains additional sodium carbonate dissolved therein) is used as a liquid feed into a process for the conversion of a portion of the sodium carbonate dissolved therein into sodium carbonate decahydrate. This “decahydrate process” produces crystals of sodium carbonate decahydrate, which are then fed directly to the sodium bicarbonate plant. The sodium carbonate decahydrate process also has some waster-water liquor, typically referred to as bitterns, but the sum of these bitterns and the waste-water from the sodium bicarbonate process (further downstream) will be less than the original stream A consumed.
- The process of the invention is illustrated in FIG. 2, where the entire process 1 is composed of three substeps, linked together as shown. Trona ore is fed into sodium carbonate process 2 which produces sodium carbonate crystal product 3 and effluent waste-water stream A. Stream A is fed into sodium carbonate to sodium carbonate decahydrate conversion plant 4 which produces sodium carbonate decahydrate crystals 5 and waste-water stream C. Sodium carbonate decahydrate crystals 5 are fed into sodium carbonate decahydrate to sodium bicarbonate conversion plant 6, with the production of sodium bicarbonate 7 and waste-water stream B. Both streams B and C contain additional still unrecovered sodium value and may be utilized as had been stream A in the past or either or both may be recycled into sodium carbonate to sodium carbonate decahydrate conversion plant 4 (with or without removal of solids as desired and with or without degassing of carbon dioxide, as may be desired).
- The following examples are intended only to exemplify the invention by way of example and are not intended to limit the scope of the claimed invention.
- The existing state of the art in the production of sodium bicarbonate from trona ore is set forth, followed by the instant invention. A mono process plant refines trona ore, ultimately producing a purge (waste-water) stream containing 30% dissolved sodium carbonate as well as a product stream of dry, commercial soda ash, some of which is used in a sodium bicarbonate plant to produce sodium bicarbonate. In the sodium bicarbonate plant, there is no purge and the conversion of soda ash to sodium bicarbonate yields virtually 100% recovery. The waste-water purge, however, is disposed of in evaporation ponds, or some may be sold locally for opportunistic uses at a very low price.
- To the above situation a decahydrate plant is added. This decahydrate plant receives the purge from the existing mono process soda ash plant as feed. The decahydrate process is essentially nothing more than a crystallizer, recovering much of the dissolved sodium carbonate as the solid decahydrate of sodium carbonate and yielding its own purge, called bitterns. The decahydrate crystals are fed to the existing sodium bicarbonate plant instead of the refined soda ash formerly fed thereto. The sodium bicarbonate plant runs more or less normally, except the added water fed (note that decahydrate is 63% water and 37% sodium carbonate) necessitates a waste-water purge stream from the sodium bicarbonate plant. At first glance, this purging of a sodium bicarbonate plant is unappealing, but in fact the net purging required with this new technology is less than that required in the prior art, as follows:
- For each pound of the waste-water stream consumed as feed into the decahydrate process according to the new process, there is generated 0.353 pounds of bitterns from the decahydrate process and 0.455 pounds of waste-water purge from the sodium bicarbonate process. Thus, total purging overall is 0.808 pounds, which is a reduction of about 19%. Furthermore, the amount of sodium value lost through purging is reduced by about 1/2, because the bitterns purge contains only 19% sodium carbonate and the sodium bicarbonate process purge contains 14% sodium carbonate equivalent. This reduction in sodium value lost through purging is evidenced by the increased soda ash available for sale, which formerly was fed to the SBC plant.
- Furthermore, despite the use of a feed stream (Deca from A) which contains more impurities than the refined soda ash of the prior art, the sodium bicarbonate produced contains about half the level of most impurities found in the prior process. A further application of the concept adds the recycling of the sodium bicarbonate purge back to the feed of the decahydrate plant, so that there is only one net purge, the bittems stream. This bitterns purge would be somewhat larger, but still less than even the improved case described above.
Claims (7)
Priority Applications (1)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US10/674,227 US7255841B2 (en) | 2001-07-20 | 2003-09-29 | Sodium bicarbonate production method |
Applications Claiming Priority (2)
| Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/910,540 US20030017099A1 (en) | 2001-07-20 | 2001-07-20 | Sodium bicarbonate production method |
| US10/674,227 US7255841B2 (en) | 2001-07-20 | 2003-09-29 | Sodium bicarbonate production method |
Related Parent Applications (1)
| Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| US09/910,540 Continuation-In-Part US20030017099A1 (en) | 2001-07-20 | 2001-07-20 | Sodium bicarbonate production method |
Publications (2)
| Publication Number | Publication Date |
|---|---|
| US20040057892A1 true US20040057892A1 (en) | 2004-03-25 |
| US7255841B2 US7255841B2 (en) | 2007-08-14 |
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| US10/674,227 Expired - Lifetime US7255841B2 (en) | 2001-07-20 | 2003-09-29 | Sodium bicarbonate production method |
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Cited By (8)
| Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
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| US20090291038A1 (en) * | 2008-05-23 | 2009-11-26 | Solvay (Societe Anonyme) | Process For The Joint Production of Sodium Carbonate and Sodium Bicarbonate |
| US20110064637A1 (en) * | 2008-05-13 | 2011-03-17 | Solvay (Societe Anonyme) | Process for the joint production of sodium carbonate and sodium bicarbonate |
| ES2409084A1 (en) * | 2011-12-20 | 2013-06-24 | Solvay Sa | Procedure to produce sodium bicarbonate. (Machine-translation by Google Translate, not legally binding) |
| ES2409083A1 (en) * | 2011-12-20 | 2013-06-24 | Solvay Sa | Preparing sodium bicarbonate comprises mixing stream containing sodium carbonate and water-soluble alkali metal salt impurity, bicarbonizing obtained stream with gas comprising carbon dioxide and separating suspension comprising crystals |
| US8865095B2 (en) | 2011-12-20 | 2014-10-21 | Solvay Sa | Process for producing sodium bicarbonate |
| EP2871156A1 (en) | 2013-11-12 | 2015-05-13 | Solvay SA | Process for treating a sodium carbonate purge |
| BE1023372B1 (en) * | 2011-12-20 | 2017-02-23 | Solvay Sa | PROCESS FOR PRODUCING SODIUM BICARBONATE |
| US10766782B2 (en) | 2015-09-23 | 2020-09-08 | Solvay Sa | Production of crystalline sodium bicarbonate |
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| US8409533B1 (en) | 2012-01-13 | 2013-04-02 | Church & Dwight Co., Inc. | Boundary layer carbonation of Trona |
| TR201609797A3 (en) | 2015-07-31 | 2018-03-21 | Swenson Tech Inc | Sodium Carbonate Monohydrate Crystallization |
| CN112850753B (en) | 2021-02-03 | 2022-06-14 | 中国天辰工程有限公司 | Process for producing natural alkali |
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| US8865095B2 (en) | 2011-12-20 | 2014-10-21 | Solvay Sa | Process for producing sodium bicarbonate |
| US9593023B2 (en) | 2013-11-12 | 2017-03-14 | Solvay Sa | Process for treating a sodium carbonate purge |
| EP3196165A1 (en) | 2013-11-12 | 2017-07-26 | Solvay SA | Concentrated aqueous sodium hydroxide solution and process for treating a sodium carbonate purge |
| EP2871156A1 (en) | 2013-11-12 | 2015-05-13 | Solvay SA | Process for treating a sodium carbonate purge |
| EP2878579A1 (en) | 2013-11-12 | 2015-06-03 | Solvay SA | Process for treating a sodium carbonate purge |
| EP3971138A1 (en) | 2013-11-12 | 2022-03-23 | Solvay SA | Process for treating a sodium carbonate purge |
| US11465907B2 (en) | 2013-11-12 | 2022-10-11 | Solvay Sa | Process for producing a concentrated aqueous sodium hydroxide solution |
| EP4400479A2 (en) | 2013-11-12 | 2024-07-17 | Solvay SA | Process for treating a sodium carbonate purge |
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